SpaceX Fires Up Private Rocket for Friday Launch to Space Station

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A private rocket has flexed its muscles in a key pre-launch test,
firing up in preparation for lofting the next commercial cargo
mission toward the International Space Station this Friday (March
1).

SpaceX's Falcon 9
rocket successfully executed a "static fire test" at
around 1:30 p.m. EST (1830 GMT) today (Feb. 25), igniting its
engines for a few seconds but staying earthbound at its launchpad
at Florida's Cape Canaveral Air Force Station.

"During the static fire test today,
SpaceX engineers ran through all countdown processes as
though it were launch day," company officials said in a
statement. "All nine engines fired at full power for two seconds,
while the Falcon 9 was held down to the pad. SpaceX will now
conduct a thorough review of all data and continue preparations
for Friday's targeted launch."

The Falcon 9 is slated to blast SpaceX's robotic Dragon capsule
toward the space station Friday on the company's second
contracted cargo run for NASA. Dragon will carry about 1,200
pounds (544 kilograms) of supplies and scientific experiments to
the orbiting lab, then return to Earth on March 25 with 2,300
pounds (1,043 kg) of experiment samples and equipment, NASA
officials have said. [ How
SpaceX's Dragon Space Capsule Works (Infographic) ]

California-based SpaceX holds a $1.6 billion deal with NASA to
make 12 such resupply flights with Dragon and the Falcon 9.
Dragon first reached the space station on a historic
demonstration mission last May, and the company then flew its
initial contracted cargo flight in October.

NASA also inked a $1.9 billion deal with Virginia-based Orbital
Sciences Corp. for eight cargo flights using the company's
Antares rocket and unmanned Cygnus capsule. Orbital plans to fly
a demonstration mission to the station later this year and
successfully test fired the first stage if the Antares rocket
last week, officials have said.

The two contracts are part of a NASA effort to encourage
American private spaceships to fill the cargo- and
crew-carrying void left by the retirement of the space shuttle
fleet in July 2011.

The space agency hopes at least one commercial vehicle is able to
carry astronauts to and from low-Earth orbit by 2017.

SpaceX is in the running to win a NASA crew contract with a
manned version of Dragon. The other major contenders are Boeing,
which is developing its own capsule called the CST-100, and
Sierra Nevada Corp., which is building a space plane called Dream
Chaser.

Until one or more of these manned spaceships is operational, NASA
will rely on Russian Soyuz spacecraft to fly its astronauts, at a
cost of about $60 million per seat.